When exploration is mentioned the scene that comes to mind is of a small boat paddling its way through new waterways with the man in the boat sketching a new map. While this is one of the two types of exploration, it is not the only one. The other type is internal exploration. This deals with the exploration of knowledge. Not a day has gone by in history that either one or both of these types of exploration has occurred. Large periods of great discoveries are called Renaissances and they change history. From Columbus to Brunelleschi there are so many people associated with exploration. Exploration, no matter where it is, who it is by, or what is being explored, is a good thing.
In the sense of external exploration the man most well-known is Christopher Columbus. Columbus’s initial motivation for venturing out into the ocean was to prove that, by traveling via the waters, a water-based trade route could be established from Iberia to the Indies rather than cutting through Arabia. This would give Spain control of the spice trade, a profit of wealth. Queen Isabella I and he was off on his exploration. Even though the original plan would have been a magnificent break-through in exploration, the actual discovery was accidental yet superior. Columbus ended up in the Bahamas. In his captain’s log Columbus wrote, “At two o'clock in the morning the land was discovered, at two leagues' distance; they took in sail and remained under the square-sail lying to till day, which was Friday, when they found themselves near a small island, one of the Lucayos, called in the Indian language Guanahani” (http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/columbus1.html). Columbus had thought he had made it to where he had wanted and proven the water route. But he had actually done something even more amazing: he had stumbled very close to the Americas. Many years later, circa 1502, Columbus made his fourth and final expedition. His instructions were, “You will make a direct voyage, if the weather does not prevent you, for discovering the islands and the mainland of the Indies in that part which belongs to us” (http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A2059418). It was still believed that Columbus had been sailing all the way around the world for all of his journeys. Even though Columbus was a great explorer and what he thought he discovered impacted the world, what he had really discovered would rock it on its axis. Columbus thought he had proved that the world was a sphere, but he had not reached the Indies. Still, by discovering the Americas and examining inhabitants, Columbus impacted the world in a way even he could not fathom. The types of explorations of Columbus and Brunelleschi were on two opposite sides of the spectrum but neither is less important than the other.
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Good thesis statement and good sources, but you don't entirely explain how your sources prove your thesis valid. You paper doesn't entirely demonstrate that exploration is "good". Consider just the case of what the expeditions of Columbus and the Spanish after him did to the native peoples of America.
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